It's just typical unreliable lithium problems I never had with NMH 1.2V. Maybe you will have better experience with those which charge from any USB micro source plugged into thier side BUT the USB-C ones charge too fast and people are complaining they overheated and started smoking. My experience is with the DELEEPOW brand. 3 problem: Random shutoffs 4 problem: Chargers often refuse to top off battery 5 problem: Thier constant voltage circuitry can interfere with wireless cameras and wifi devices to the point you can't use them. Several batteries I used went dead after only 5 recharges. 2 problem:So, they do not last for 1000's of recharges like they claim, nor is their capacity the mAh, or mWh what they claim. Also they have only HALF the capacity of a NiMH Ladda battery.ġ problem:They are all made in China. The 1.6V "nominal" voltage is deceptive in that the fully charged battery will be 1.85V and will DAMAGE your device. Stop using Alkaline batteries period.īTW, stay away from NiZn rechargeable batteries. So save the planet and buy decent NiMH batteries. Whereas, my AA/AAA NIMH devices will go for weeks or months (some are recharged yearly) without a recharge. While LiIon batteries are great I'm CONSTANTLY (daily) recharging them. That's why I still can use some of my Rayovac batteries.įinally I will say that we are in a battery revolution period so we should see better technologies in the future. Too many crappy chargers prematurely (heat) damage NiMH batteries by not monitoring SoC. Also, always use a high quality charger that doesn't OVERCHARGE the batteries. AND, I don't worry about Duraleaks destroying my devices either. I still use my 25 year old Ray-O-Vac batteries for some remotes that I use. I haven't bought alkaline batteries in decades b/c I just keep recharging my NiMHs over and over. You also have the advantage of not THROWING batteries away all the time. So yes, you may see the dreaded "low battery" warning, you can continue to use the device for much longer than an alkaline battery with the same warning. The NiMH batteries on the other hand, have what is known as a "plateau" discharge curve and still has 2/3 of its capacity left to work at 1.2V. Alkaline batteries have a fairly "linear" discharge curve, meaning that when it's at 1.2V it's nearing is end of its useful life. They discharge differently in their usage. Please try and understand the problem with AA/AAA alkaline vs NiMH batteries. If parallel then no worries on extra power if I’ve done everyting correctly ONLY worry about this if the batteries are in series. Idk if mentionedbjy as u prob now alkaline after about an hour and Nimh are the same so that’s the juice it expects. Double down on all the bad.Ĭome devices tjiugh can’t handles the 4.5 bolts constant. The ones with the USB plug to thhe battery NO NO NO NO NO. MOST of these companies do NOT make AAA batteries. Don’t see a huge difference besides the 2 big ones more reliable and easier since 1.ĭidn’t notice draining or power differences as I let them run till they stopped. They work equivalent to a 14500 or 18650 in the flashlights. Real good or just gets hot and doenst work. Blue ones stronger but lies on capacity badlyĮBL is cheap like I said for flashlights but yeah it’s hits and miss. Gogastone are old and game bad, even the replacements. TeneVOLTS then an off brand called kraxton and doublepow. Something like a controller or something more expensive and not extreme high drain then you want that constant power Had to get an external charger that was better.įlashlights and stuff ur shitty Chinese ones are fine. Related sub-reddits:īrother this is the post for me then ahaha I had no one for answers so I did it all myself. No memes (pictures with superimposed text), shit postsĬomplete rules: /r/batteries/about/rules/.If asking a question, ask the actual question, fully yet concisely, right in the title.Be civil: do not insult no all-caps, no excessive "!" and "?", please. Dangerous or damaging (tasers, EMP, vaping).Organic spam from cell and battery manufacturers.Education and safety about batteries and related technologies.Pictures or cells, batteries, power banks, UPSs.Cell, battery, and BMS recommendations and comparisons.Discussion and questions about cell chemistry.Repairing batteries, power banks, UPSs, or BMSs.Battery, power bank, or UPS design help.
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